Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre

Leonard Pokrovski
Moderator
Iscritto: 2022-07-25 12:14:58
2024-02-14 21:37:15

I

I went to work when I was just out of grammar school. I got a job as
quotation-board boy in a stock-brokerage office. I was quick at figures.
At school I did three years of arithmetic in one. I was particularly good at
mental arithmetic. As quotation-board boy I posted the numbers on the big
board in the customers’ room. One of the customers usually sat by the
ticker and called out the prices. They couldn’t come too fast for me. I
have always remembered figures. No trouble at all.
There were plenty of other employees in that office. Of course I made
friends with the other fellows, but the work I did, if the market was active,
kept me too busy from ten A.A. to three P.M. to let me do much talking. I
don’t care for it, anyhow, during business hours.

But a busy market did not keep me from thinking about the work. Those
quotations did not represent prices of stocks to me, so many dollars per
share. They were numbers. Of course, they meant something. They were
always changing. It was all I had to be interested in—the changes. Why did
they change? I didn’t know. I didn’t care. I didn’t think about that. I simply
saw that they changed. That was all I had to think about five hours every
day and two on Saturdays: that they were always changing.

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre

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